Impediments in a Cameroon Government Service Subverting Christians from Rendering Equitable Services That Free Casualties of Injustices
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Impediments in a Cameroon Government Service Subverting Christians from Rendering Equitable Services That Free Casualties of Injustices
- Publication date
- 2024-06-08
- Topics
- Ministry, church and state, Cameroon
- Collection
- opensource
- Language
- English
- Item Size
- 118.1M
Christian service providers including receivers in a Cameroon Ministry of State
Property, Surveys and Land Tenure are blocked by impediments from engaging in
equitable services from a Christian ethical perspective for the good of all. This writer
sampled the experiences of twenty eight knowledgeable participants from the Regional
Capital city of Bamenda and the National Capital City of Yaoundé to provide information
for this research problem and experiences. Exploratory sequential mixed survey was also
selected which probed into the experiences of these participants to generate a practical
theory to free them unto holy sustainable equitable services. The data was collected
through open ended semi structured questionnaires through two contact persons in the
two cities with specific protocol guidelines and a follow up by this writer through
WhatsApp. The practice of double standard by actors of this ministry in the course of
assessing this writer’s land for certification moved him to undertake this project. He also
wanted to investigate why despite the presence of Christian service providers in the
ministry yet double standards prevail therein. Subsequently through the interviews he
discovered the prevalence of an all- inclusive, indiscriminate national culture in the
Ministry which markets ought to be free services. More so, the practice of some moral
ethics seem to be the spirit maintaining this predacious culture which has dichotomized
Christian service character. Remedially, a deployment of deontological ethics in the
public services and ventilation of the historical concept of state Church separation to Church/state separation and cooperation can dismantle these blockages. More so, the
findings demand a recodification of land laws in Cameroon; digitalizing land titling
procedure for contemporary realities; the implacability of Christian identity as light from
the Church to the public space and the meritocratic vestment of Christians for their just
services as dispellers of injustices.
Property, Surveys and Land Tenure are blocked by impediments from engaging in
equitable services from a Christian ethical perspective for the good of all. This writer
sampled the experiences of twenty eight knowledgeable participants from the Regional
Capital city of Bamenda and the National Capital City of Yaoundé to provide information
for this research problem and experiences. Exploratory sequential mixed survey was also
selected which probed into the experiences of these participants to generate a practical
theory to free them unto holy sustainable equitable services. The data was collected
through open ended semi structured questionnaires through two contact persons in the
two cities with specific protocol guidelines and a follow up by this writer through
WhatsApp. The practice of double standard by actors of this ministry in the course of
assessing this writer’s land for certification moved him to undertake this project. He also
wanted to investigate why despite the presence of Christian service providers in the
ministry yet double standards prevail therein. Subsequently through the interviews he
discovered the prevalence of an all- inclusive, indiscriminate national culture in the
Ministry which markets ought to be free services. More so, the practice of some moral
ethics seem to be the spirit maintaining this predacious culture which has dichotomized
Christian service character. Remedially, a deployment of deontological ethics in the
public services and ventilation of the historical concept of state Church separation to Church/state separation and cooperation can dismantle these blockages. More so, the
findings demand a recodification of land laws in Cameroon; digitalizing land titling
procedure for contemporary realities; the implacability of Christian identity as light from
the Church to the public space and the meritocratic vestment of Christians for their just
services as dispellers of injustices.
- Addeddate
- 2024-06-28 00:24:32
- Identifier
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